
Wreckage from the Japan Coast Guard aircraft and Japan Airlines collision
The Tokyo police are looking at
charging someone for the fatal
collision between the Japan
Coast Guard aircraft and Japan
Airlines
charging someone for the fatal
collision between the Japan
Coast Guard aircraft and Japan
Airlines
The Yomiuri Shimbun is reporting that the Tokyo Metropolitan police are investigating the collision between the Japan Coast Guard aircraft and the A350 Japan Airlines as a crime.
The collision resulted in the deaths of 5 crew members and one injured on the Japan Coast Guard aircraft. All 379 people onboard the Japan Airlines were lucky, lucky because despite 17 people being injured, they all made it out alive.
The Tokyo Metropolitan police are aware of the fact that they have a total of 380 people, and not 374 people, survive.
Basically, the police want to know why the 39-year-old captain of the Japan Coast Guard aircraft was the only one to make it out alive.
The police have formed an elite investigative group in order to get the answer to the questions of, “Who was where when they knew how and what they were going to do?”
According to The Yomiuri Shimbun, the police are looking at charging somebody or many bodies with the crimes of “professional negligence” and “manslaughter.”
Currently, due to the fact that the young, 39-year-old captain was not given the okay to be on the runway while the Japan Airlines was landing, he is the perfect somebody to be hit with the charges of “professional negligence” and “manslaughter.”
The collision resulted in the deaths of 5 crew members and one injured on the Japan Coast Guard aircraft. All 379 people onboard the Japan Airlines were lucky, lucky because despite 17 people being injured, they all made it out alive.
The Tokyo Metropolitan police are aware of the fact that they have a total of 380 people, and not 374 people, survive.
Basically, the police want to know why the 39-year-old captain of the Japan Coast Guard aircraft was the only one to make it out alive.
The police have formed an elite investigative group in order to get the answer to the questions of, “Who was where when they knew how and what they were going to do?”
According to The Yomiuri Shimbun, the police are looking at charging somebody or many bodies with the crimes of “professional negligence” and “manslaughter.”
Currently, due to the fact that the young, 39-year-old captain was not given the okay to be on the runway while the Japan Airlines was landing, he is the perfect somebody to be hit with the charges of “professional negligence” and “manslaughter.”
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